Thursday, September 26, 2024

USA

U.S. Economy Had Stronger Rebound From Pandemic, G.D.P. Data Shows - The New York Times

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

New Data Finds Sharper Economic Rebound From Pandemic

Updated figures show that gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, grew faster in 2021, 2022 and early 2023 than previously reported.

Listen to this article · 3:54 min Learn more
People cross the street at an intersection near a mall.
The new estimates show that gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, grew faster in 2021, 2022 and early 2023 than initially believed.

The U.S. economy emerged from the pandemic even more quickly than previously reported, revised data from the federal government shows.

The Commerce Department on Thursday released updated estimates of gross domestic product over the past five years, part of a longstanding annual process to incorporate data that isn’t available in time for the agency’s quarterly releases.

The new estimates show that G.D.P., adjusted for inflation, grew faster in 2021, 2022 and early 2023 than initially believed. The revisions are relatively small in most quarters, but they suggest that the rebound from the pandemic — already among the fastest recoveries on record — was stronger and more consistent than earlier data showed.

Quarterly change in gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation

Quarterly changes shown as seasonally adjusted annual rates

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

By The New York Times

Perhaps most notably, the government now says G.D.P. grew slightly in the second quarter of 2022, rather than contracting as previously believed. As a result, government statistics no longer show the U.S. economy as experiencing two consecutive quarters of declining G.D.P. in early 2022 — a common definition of a recession, though not the one used in the United States. (The revised data still shows that G.D.P. declined in the first quarter of 2022, but more modestly than previously reported.)

The official arbiter of recession in the United States is the National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit research organization made up of academic economists. The group defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months,” and it bases its decisions on a variety of indicators including employment, income and spending.

Few economists in 2022 believed that the U.S. economy met the requirements for a recession. But many feared it was headed for one because of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive efforts to bring down inflation with high interest rates. Instead, growth quickly resumed and has remained surprisingly resilient.

More recently, however, slowing job growth and rising unemployment have led some forecasters, including at the Fed, to worry that resilience might be fading. The revisions on Thursday showed that growth was somewhat weaker in late 2023 than had initially been reported, but was slightly stronger early this year.

The government’s estimate of the growth rate of G.D.P. in the second quarter of 2024 was unchanged at 3 percent. Consumer spending grew slightly more slowly than previously reported, but business investment was revised upward.

The reliability of U.S. economic data has been under increasing scrutiny recently, particularly after an unusually large downward revision last month to estimates of job growth in 2023 and early 2024.

The G.D.P. updates, however, were not large by historical standards, and were in the opposite direction from the jobs revisions. And the new figures more closely align with other data from the period that suggested the economy was on firm footing.

The new data also help resolve what had been a bit of an economic mystery. Gross domestic income — an alternative measure of growth based on income rather than spending — had appeared to be significantly weaker than gross domestic product in recent quarters. That was perplexing because the two measures should, in theory, be identical.

The revisions on Thursday narrowed the gap, though they didn’t eliminate it. The government now says gross domestic income increased 2.9 percent from the end of 2022 to the end of 2023, compared with 3.2 percent growth in G.D.P. during the same period. (Both figures are adjusted for inflation.)

Ben Casselman writes about economics with a particular focus on stories involving data. He has covered the economy for nearly 20 years, and his recent work has focused on how trends in labor, politics, technology and demographics have shaped the way we live and work. More about Ben Casselman

See more on: Commerce Department

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

No comments:

Twitter Updates

Search This Blog

Total Pageviews